LA's "dancing fool" is at it again. With his signature dance moves and penchant for cutting a rug in the middle of traffic, Nathan Barnatt took to the streets of LA for another video, released Tuesday. Only this time, he's in an Obama mask and wearing a suit and tie.

He's also got something to say: "I'm Barack Obama, and I party."

The video is set to RAC's remix of the song "Something Good Can Work" by Two Door Cinema Club. Barnatt describes the dance as a "mild political statement," urging Obama supporters to have a little more patience with the President.

"I hear people complaining about how Obama hasn't done anything since he was elected," wrote Barnatt in an email to The Huffington Post. "I think it takes some time to fix big problems."

"In my opinion Obama is something good and can work," Barnatt continued. "He is in my opinion and lifetime the coolest president we've had."

Of course, Obama might be too cool for his own good nowadays. An attack ad released by a Republican super PAC last April mocked the President for rubbing elbows with Hollywood stars. "Four years ago, America elected the biggest celebrity in the world, and America got one cool president,” the video says. “But after four years of a celebrity president, is your life any better?”

Barnatt, an actor and comedian, has a following of 146,041 subscribers on YouTube. In a previous interview with HuffPost, he described how YouTube gave him an opportunity to practice his craft without waiting for a studio to come around:

Barnatt echoed that same advice now, urging young actors to make their own opportunities. "The chances of getting into something are so slim, you should create your own thing and focus on it really well. Don't sit around and wait for other people to do those things."

Related on HuffPost:

Check out more of Nathan Barnatt's wacky viral videos:

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Dancing Fool Around LA

You've probably seen this video of a dancing fool shake it all across Los Angeles. He's just one of several characters that Barnatt has created for his YouTube channel.
"I love doing things that are embarrassing in public," said Barnatt. Shame is a palpable thing, he explained, "and these videos are satisfying for the viewer because they can really feel it."
Cummings, who films and edits the videos, said the segments shot on roads and highways are the worst part of making the films. "The raw audio from those segments are just people screaming at us, yelling 'get out of the road!' " he said.
In this video, Barnatt dances to Yelle's "Que Veux-Tu." Barnatt loves listening to the French singer's music, and he made it in the hopes that she would see his video.